On Mon, 18 Jun 2018 10:34:54 -0700, Jim Lee wrote: > The syntax should be defined inside comments
Then you ought to be pleased that from Python 4.0 (or from Python 3.7 with a ``__future__`` import) annotations will be treated as strings by the interpreter. That makes them effectively special comments like docstrings: they aren't executed, only recorded in the object for introspection. def func(x: int) -> str: becomes precisely the same as: def func(x): # type x:int, return:str except that the comment is attached to the function as a string for runtime introspection. > by the tools that actually > need to use them. Let the tools do what they were designed to do. Let > the language do what it was designed to do. Then you should be glad, because the language is designed to do this. Annotations in Python are the end result of a long, carefully thought out design process. > If static type checking were a high priority, I would not choose a > language like Python for the task You are talking as if "static type checking" were an end in itself. That's like saying "If unit tests were a high priority, I would not choose a language like C". Static type-checking is a means to an end. The end is more reliable code and making it easier to find bugs. I trust you don't mean to imply that you don't need to find bugs in Python code. If your linter or IDE can tell you that the function you intended to return a string can sometimes return None, why is this so horrible? > - but some people seem to want to beat > the language into submission as a do-everything-but-wash-my-car > solution; and in so doing, the language becomes so fragile and bloated > that people will walk away from it. Ah, I wondered how long it would be before the "feature X is killing Python" FUD reared its ugly head. > In reading through many of the PEPs, I'm reminded of the saying, "If all > you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail". And when the most advanced tool you've used is a hammer, an electric drill looks like a very expensive, awkward to use hammer. -- Steven D'Aprano "Ever since I learned about confirmation bias, I've been seeing it everywhere." -- Jon Ronson -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list